Temporal dynamics of coordinated online behavior: Stability, archetypes, and influence
Document Type
Article
Publication Title
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America
Abstract
Large-scale online campaigns, malicious or otherwise, require a significant degree of coordination among participants, which sparked interest in the study of coordinated online behavior. State-of-the-art methods for detecting coordinated behavior perform static analyses, disregarding the temporal dynamics of coordination. Here, we carry out a dynamic analysis of coordinated behavior. To reach our goal, we build a multiplex temporal network and we perform dynamic community detection to identify groups of users that exhibited coordinated behaviors in time. We find that i) coordinated communities (CCs) feature variable degrees of temporal instability; ii) dynamic analyses are needed to account for such instability, and results of static analyses can be unreliable and scarcely representative of unstable communities; iii) some users exhibit distinct archetypal behaviors that have important practical implications; iv) content and network characteristics contribute to explaining why users leave and join CCs. Our results demonstrate the advantages of dynamic analyses and open up new directions of research on the unfolding of online debates, on the strategies of CCs, and on the patterns of online influence.
DOI
10.1073/pnas.2307038121
Publication Date
4-2-2024
Keywords
coordinated behavior, dynamic networks, online influence, social media, stability
Recommended Citation
S. Tardelli et al., "Temporal dynamics of coordinated online behavior: Stability, archetypes, and influence," Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America, vol. 121, no. 20, Apr 2024.
The definitive version is available at https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.2307038121